Calling it a shredder isn't right; because technically it doesn't shred the CD's But that's what ThinkGeek calls it and we agree on the name (only) from the usability point :-)

What it really does is to scratch the CD's and DVD's that you feed into the shredder enough so that the data becomes un-recoverable. So, you don't get little pieces of 'CD confetti' like the paper shredders, but CD's like they were scratched by a gazillion cats in a alley fight.> Read more

Holy Moly. This thing is big. The largest desktop hard disk drive to date, the the 750 GB Seagate hard disk drive has pushed data storage to unprecdented levels. Part of Barracuda 7200.10 series, the 3.5-inch 750 Hard disk drive is capable of pushing data at the speed of 3.0Gb/sec and has three new features; 'Adaptive Fly Height', 'Clean Sweep' and a automatic bad sector scan.

The Adaptive Fly height technology is kind of like 'self raising shock absorbers for cars'; the drive monitors the temperature of the environment, and accordingly raising or decreasing the height of the read-write head inside the hard disk for optimum operation and performance. Clean Sweep on the other hand polishes and cleans the hard disk media at every power-on. The automatic bad sector scan activates automatically when the drive remains idle for some time and scans & marks bad sectors on the drive with out the need for 'Scandisk' or any other disk utility. Since it happens and requires no user-intervention it is also more effective. > Read more

54 Mbps of 802.11g isn't enough? Want more speed? Then, the RangeMax Next Wireless Networking Kit from NetGear is the gear to get. Complaint with 802.11n, the wireless router and adapter works at 300 Mbps and is also backwards compatible with 802.11 b and g. Costs $349.99 from Tiger Direct for the WNB511T model, which includes a four port Cable/DSL router and a notebook adapter.

This product is only at the concept stage, so you can't buy it. But, it's a standard USB drive that has a tiny pump in it that inflates when you load it with data. So if your drive is full of stuff, it blows up like a balloon, but if it's empty it remains flat and rectangular.

Sounds like some concept allright. But, we can't think of anyone who would want something like this. Would you carry a full size mango in your pocket? No, then why would you carry this, aye? > Read more